Kidd Bros. Lumber Co., Inc. v. TONNIS

149 N.E.2d 828, 128 Ind. App. 459, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 120
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1958
Docket18,841
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 N.E.2d 828 (Kidd Bros. Lumber Co., Inc. v. TONNIS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidd Bros. Lumber Co., Inc. v. TONNIS, 149 N.E.2d 828, 128 Ind. App. 459, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 120 (Ind. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Kelley, C. J.

Appellant brought this action against the appellees to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for materials and lumber allegedly furnished and used in the reconstruction and repair of a house situate on appel-lees’ land. Appellant appeals from a judgment adverse to it on its complaint and for appellees for costs.

The sole question presented and argued by the parties, and the one on which the case must turn, is whether the last material was furnished and delivered by appellant for use in the building under construction within the sixty days prior to the recording of its notice of intention to hold a lien on the land. The notice of lien was duly recorded on January 31, 1952, but the controversy is whether the evidence conclusively establishes that the last materials were furnished and delivered by appellant on December 4, 1951, as appellant claims. The invoices in evidence show that the date of the delivery of material next prior to that of December 4, 1951 was October 24, 1951. Thus the notice of intention to hold a mechanic’s lien on the real estate involved was not filed within the statutory time unless the last delivery of material was made on December 4, 1951.

*461 Appellant’s contention is that his evidence made á prima facie case that the materials were delivered for use in the premises on December 4, 1951 and that the evidence of appellees on the question of delivery possessed no probative value and, therefore, he was denied relief to which the evidence entitled him. The burden, of course, was on the appellant to establish the material elements of his cause, one of which was that the last materials were delivered for use in the premises on December 4, 1951.

The evidence discloses that the contract for the reconstruction work was between appellee, Tonnis, Jr., and the Associated Maintenance & Builders Company, a partnership composed of one Earl Edwards and Claude jC. Ash. Prior to the completion of the work Ash quit and left the job, turning over to Edwards the books, records, and specifications pertaining thereto. Before the institution of appellant’s action, Edwards disappeared and his whereabouts was unknown. In addition to other .invoices bearing prior dates of claimed delivery of material, appellant put in evidence two invoices, numbered 10569 and 10577, respectively, for the materials under date of December 4, 1951. Neither of these invoices show any delivery receipt. One, No. 10569, bears a written notation that the material was called for but not the name of the person making the call or to whom delivery was made. The other invoice does not indicate the manner- of delivery nor -the person to whom delivery was made.

To establish the fact of delivery and use of the materials invoiced under date of December-4, 1951, appellant called as its witness, the said Claude Ash. He testified as to the agreement with appellee, Tonnis, Jr.; that he had checked over the invoice and that he had personal knowledge that the materials shown by the exhibit were delivered to and used in the work done *462 pursuant to the agreement; that he remained on the job for three months but could not say when he started the work; that he and the two or three men working with him put in 342 working hours but that he didn’t know the number of days of work; that during the three months, he worked, intermittently, ten days; that he left the job first, turning the records and specifications over to Edwards, and that when he left the house was all finished but the plumbing and landscaping.

The appellee, William E. Tonnis, Jr., testified that the items listed in the invoices referred to as 31 and 32 (the same being invoices numbered 10569 and 10577, dated December 4, 1951, appellant’s Exhibit 1) were not delivered to his residence (the property being improved) ; that on said date there was no need for the lumber covered by said invoices; that none of said material was left on the premises; that neither Ash nor Edwards nor any of their employees were doing any work on the house during the months of November and December,' 1951; that he had a conversation with Ash and Edwards in- the last week of October, 1951, and thereafter neither Ash nor Edwards nor any of their employees ever came back to do any work on the house; and that he completed it.

On cross-examination Tonnis testified that the last work by Ash and Edwards was in the latter part of October, 1951; that he was not living in the house during December, 1951; that'the place was vacant; that during December, 1951 he was employed as a district manager of a named newspaper circulation department, with varied working hours, generally between three and six or seven in the morning and a few hours later in the day; that he was not on the premises every hour of the day on December 4, 1951 and that some material could have been delivered to the premises and put in *463 the premises in his absence. On re-direct examination, he said that he kept a check and watch on the course of construction throughout the building period; that the main floor was completely plastered on November 1, 1951 and the second floor completed as to the erection of all gables, exterior siding, and roof; that the house was locked up in November and December, 1951; and that he completed the construction after Ash and Edwards discontinued in October, 1951. He further testified that the plastering of the unfinished attic was completed in the early part of October; that “during that time” (what time was referred to is not revealed) the workmen did have egress to the premises and did go and come, including Mr. Ash and his workmen; that after the last week in October, 1951 he continued to go back to the house and had personal knowledge of what took place in the way of construction; and that there was no place where the items of materials in question could then have been used in the construction.

Appellant asserts that under the rule announced in the case of Rhoades v. State (1946), 224 Ind. 569, 70 N. E. 2d 27, the said testimony of Tonnis has no probative value; and that, therefore, appellees have not sustained the burden of showing that the material was not delivered on December 4, 1951, which burden, appellant says, devolved upon them when appellant prima facie established such delivery by the evidence of said Ash and the invoices.

The Rhoades case, supra, involved an appeal from a conviction of grand larceny. The question was whether the evidence sustained beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused stole an oil drum containing motor oil “the personal goods and chattels of Tecumseh Coal Corporation.” A witness testified that he had 12 barrels of oil in his possession which he had sold to and- intended to deliver to said corpora *464 tion. One of the barrels of oil which was missing was the subject of the theft. The witness stated on cross-examination that the corporation had not paid for the oil and he did not know whether it belonged to him or the corporation; that he was responsible for the oil until it was delivered and it would not be paid for until it was delivered.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E.2d 828, 128 Ind. App. 459, 1958 Ind. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidd-bros-lumber-co-inc-v-tonnis-indctapp-1958.